github.com/svenhamers/terraform@v0.11.12-beta1/website/upgrade-guides/0-7.html.markdown (about) 1 --- 2 layout: "downloads" 3 page_title: "Upgrading to Terraform 0.7" 4 sidebar_current: "upgrade-guides-0-7" 5 description: |- 6 Upgrading to Terraform v0.7 7 --- 8 9 # Upgrading to Terraform v0.7 10 11 Terraform v0.7 is a major release, and thus includes some backwards incompatibilities that you'll need to consider when upgrading. This guide is meant to help with that process. 12 13 The goal of this guide is to cover the most common upgrade concerns and issues that would benefit from more explanation and background. The exhaustive list of changes will always be the [Terraform Changelog](https://github.com/hashicorp/terraform/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md). After reviewing this guide, review the Changelog to check on specific notes about the resources and providers you use. 14 15 ## Plugin Binaries 16 17 Before v0.7, Terraform's built-in plugins for providers and provisioners were each distributed as separate binaries. 18 19 ``` 20 terraform # core binary 21 terraform-provider-* # provider plugins 22 terraform-provisioner-* # provisioner plugins 23 ``` 24 25 These binaries needed to all be extracted to somewhere in your `$PATH` or in the `~/.terraform.d` directory for Terraform to work. 26 27 As of v0.7, all built-in plugins ship embedded in a single binary. This means that if you just extract the v0.7 archive into a path, you may still have the old separate binaries in your `$PATH`. You'll need to remove them manually. 28 29 For example, if you keep Terraform binaries in `/usr/local/bin` you can clear out the old external binaries like this: 30 31 ``` 32 rm /usr/local/bin/terraform-* 33 ``` 34 35 External plugin binaries continue to work using the same pattern, but due to updates to the RPC protocol, they will need to be recompiled to be compatible with Terraform v0.7.x. 36 37 ## Maps in Displayed Plans 38 39 When displaying a plan, Terraform now distinguishes attributes of type map by using a `%` character for the "length field". 40 41 Here is an example showing a diff that includes both a list and a map: 42 43 ``` 44 somelist.#: "0" => "1" 45 somelist.0: "" => "someitem" 46 somemap.%: "0" => "1" 47 somemap.foo: "" => "bar" 48 ``` 49 50 ## Interpolation Changes 51 52 There are a few changes to Terraform's interpolation language that may require updates to your configs. 53 54 ### String Concatenation 55 56 The `concat()` interpolation function used to work for both lists and strings. It now only works for lists. 57 58 ``` 59 "${concat(var.foo, "-suffix")}" # => Error! No longer supported. 60 ``` 61 62 Instead, you can use variable interpolation for string concatenation. 63 64 ``` 65 "${var.foo}-suffix" 66 ``` 67 68 ### Nested Quotes and Escaping 69 70 Escaped quotes inside of interpolations were supported to retain backwards compatibility with older versions of Terraform that allowed them. 71 72 Now, escaped quotes will no longer work in the interpolation context: 73 74 ``` 75 "${lookup(var.somemap, \"somekey\")}" # => Syntax Error! 76 ``` 77 78 Instead, treat each set of interpolation braces (`${}`) as a new quoting context: 79 80 ``` 81 "${lookup(var.somemap, "somekey")}" 82 ``` 83 84 This allows double quote characters to be expressed properly within strings inside of interpolation expressions: 85 86 ``` 87 "${upper("\"quoted\"")}" # => "QUOTED" 88 ``` 89 90 ## Safer `terraform plan` Behavior 91 92 Prior to v0.7, the `terraform plan` command had the potential to write updates to the state if changes were detected during the Refresh step (which happens by default during `plan`). Some configurations have metadata that changes with every read, so Refresh would always result in changes to the state, and therefore a write. 93 94 In collaborative environments with shared remote state, this potential side effect of `plan` would cause unnecessary contention over the state, and potentially even interfere with active `apply` operations if they were happening simultaneously elsewhere. 95 96 Terraform v0.7 addresses this by changing the Refresh process that is run during `terraform plan` to always be an in-memory only refresh. New state information detected during this step will not be persisted to permanent state storage. 97 98 If the `-out` flag is used to produce a Plan File, the updated state information _will_ be encoded into that file, so that the resulting `terraform apply` operation can detect if any changes occurred that might invalidate the plan. 99 100 For most users, this change will not affect your day-to-day usage of Terraform. For users with automation that relies on the old side effect of `plan`, you can use the `terraform refresh` command, which will still persist any changes it discovers. 101 102 ## Migrating to Data Sources 103 104 With the addition of [Data Sources](/docs/configuration/data-sources.html), there are several resources that were acting as Data Sources that are now deprecated. Existing configurations will continue to work, but will print a deprecation warning when a data source is used as a resource. 105 106 * `atlas_artifact` 107 * `template_file` 108 * `template_cloudinit_config` 109 * `tls_cert_request` 110 111 Migrating to the equivalent Data Source is as simple as changing the `resource` keyword to `data` in your declaration and prepending `data.` to attribute references elsewhere in your config. 112 113 For example, given a config like: 114 115 ``` 116 resource "template_file" "example" { 117 template = "someconfig" 118 } 119 resource "aws_instance" "example" { 120 user_data = "${template_file.example.rendered}" 121 # ... 122 } 123 ``` 124 125 A config using the equivalent Data Source would look like this: 126 127 ``` 128 data "template_file" "example" { 129 template = "someconfig" 130 } 131 resource "aws_instance" "example" { 132 user_data = "${data.template_file.example.rendered}" 133 # ... 134 } 135 ``` 136 137 Referencing remote state outputs has also changed. The `.output` keyword is no longer required. 138 139 For example, a config like this: 140 141 ``` 142 resource "terraform_remote_state" "example" { 143 # ... 144 } 145 146 resource "aws_instance" "example" { 147 ami = "${terraform_remote_state.example.output.ami_id}" 148 # ... 149 } 150 ``` 151 152 Would now look like this: 153 154 ``` 155 data "terraform_remote_state" "example" { 156 # ... 157 } 158 159 resource "aws_instance" "example" { 160 ami = "${data.terraform_remote_state.example.ami_id}" 161 # ... 162 } 163 ``` 164 165 <a id="listmap"></a> 166 167 ## Migrating to native lists and maps 168 169 Terraform 0.7 now supports lists and maps as first-class constructs. Although the patterns commonly used in previous versions still work (excepting any compatibility notes), there are now patterns with cleaner syntax available. 170 171 For example, a common pattern for exporting a list of values from a module was to use an output with a `join()` interpolation, like this: 172 173 ``` 174 output "private_subnets" { 175 value = "${join(",", aws_subnet.private.*.id)}" 176 } 177 ``` 178 179 When using the value produced by this output in another module, a corresponding `split()` would be used to retrieve individual elements, often parameterized by `count.index`, for example: 180 181 ``` 182 subnet_id = "${element(split(",", var.private_subnets), count.index)}" 183 ``` 184 185 Using Terraform 0.7, list values can now be passed between modules directly. The above example can read like this for the output: 186 187 ``` 188 output "private_subnets" { 189 value = ["${aws_subnet.private.*.id}"] 190 } 191 ``` 192 193 And then when passed to another module as a `list` type variable, we can index directly using `[]` syntax: 194 195 ``` 196 subnet_id = "${var.private_subnets[count.index]}" 197 ``` 198 199 Note that indexing syntax does not wrap around if the extent of a list is reached - for example if you are trying to distribute 10 instances across three private subnets. For this behaviour, `element` can still be used: 200 201 ``` 202 subnet_id = "${element(var.private_subnets, count.index)}" 203 ``` 204 205 ## Map value overrides 206 207 Previously, individual elements in a map could be overridden by using a dot notation. For example, if the following variable was declared: 208 209 ``` 210 variable "amis" { 211 type = "map" 212 default = { 213 us-east-1 = "ami-123456" 214 us-west-2 = "ami-456789" 215 eu-west-1 = "ami-789123" 216 } 217 } 218 ``` 219 220 The key "us-west-2" could be overridden using `-var "amis.us-west-2=overridden_value"` (or equivalent in an environment variable or `tfvars` file). The syntax for this has now changed - instead maps from the command line will be merged with the default value, with maps from flags taking precedence. The syntax for overriding individual values is now: 221 222 ``` 223 -var 'amis = { us-west-2 = "overridden_value" }' 224 ``` 225 226 This will give the map the effective value: 227 228 ``` 229 { 230 us-east-1 = "ami-123456" 231 us-west-2 = "overridden_value" 232 eu-west-1 = "ami-789123" 233 } 234 ``` 235 236 It's also possible to override the values in a variables file, either in any `terraform.tfvars` file, an `.auto.tfvars` file, or specified using the `-var-file` flag.